Personnel Armor System for Ground Troops
Personnel Armor System for Ground Troops, sometimes abbreviated to PASGT, was a combat helmet and ballistic vest used by the American military from the late 1980s until 2003, when the system was succeeded by the Lightweight Helmet, MICH TC-2000 Combat Helmet, and Interceptor body armor.
Helmet
The Personnel Armor System Ground Troops Helmet, also known as the "K-pot" and also the "Fritz" helmet for its resemblance to the World War II German army helmet, is a standard infantry combat wear in the U.S. Military. The shell is made from 29 layers of Kevlar, a ballistic aramid fabric treated with a phenolic resin system and is rated at a Threat Level II, and offers protection against shrapnel and ballistic threats. It meets the 1800 requirement of MIL-STD-662 E. It weighs from 3.1 pounds (size extra small) to 4.2 pounds (extra large).
The PASGT Helmet was developed in 1975 and replaced the steel M1 Helmet in US service during the 1980s and first saw use in combat in 1983 during Operation Urgent Fury in Grenada. The PASGT Helmet is currently being phased out by the Advanced Combat Helmet (MICH) in U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force service and the Lightweight Helmet (LWH) in U.S.M.C. & U.S. Navy service.
The PASGT Helmet is typically olive drab in color and can be fitted with cloth helmet covers in varying camouflage patterns, which have included M81 Woodland, six-color desert, and three-color desert (as shown above), solid black (for SWAT teams), as well as the new Marine Corps MARPAT and Army UCP designs. The helmet is also used by various SWAT teams, wherein it is often black with or without covering, as well as by various United Nations Peacekeeping forces where it is often painted robin's egg blue to match the UN flag. When worn with a helmet cover, it is also often fitted with a band around it that has two reflective patches (sometimes known as cat eyes) on the rear intended to reduce friendly fire incidents. These bands are also used to hold vegetation or small personal items, as with the M1 helmet before it during the later decades of its service life. These bands can also have names and/or blood types printed on them to help identify the wearer. Some PASGT helmets also featured a patch with the wearer's rank insignia on it stitched to the front, and/or a second patch showing the symbol of his/her unit on the sides.
Available add-ons include a Helmet Mount Assembly that allows attachment of NE-6015 (AN/PVS-14 MNVD) or F5001B (AN/PVS-7B) night vision goggles. It can also be fitted with an acrylic glass visor for use in riot control operations.
In a demonstration of the Heckler & Koch MP7 on the Discovery Channel show Future Weapons, a PASGT helmet suffered a catastrophic armor penetration when hit head-on with one round of the MP7's 4.6x30mm ammunition. Similarly, the firearms testing site The Box o' Truth has reported that a 7.62x25mm Tokarev fired from a ČZ vz. 52 handgun was able to penetrate the helmet at 25 meters. In the same test, both the 5.56x45mm NATO and the 7.62x39mm were able to yield catastrophic penetrations through both sides of the helmet. [1]
Vest
The Personnel Armor System for Ground Troops Vest, also known as the "flak vest", was the United States Military's standard upper torso body armor from the early 1980s until approximately 2004, when it was replaced by the Interceptor body armor. The PASGT Vest replaced the Vietnam War-era M-69 Fragmentation Protective Body Armor nylon vest, which in turn replaced the Korean War-era M-1952A Fragmentation Protective Body Armor. The PASGT Vest used Kevlar for the first time in the United States military's body armor, unlike the ballistic nylon used in the previous two models. While incapable of stopping rifle bullets, the PASGT Vest provided better protection against shrapnel and reduced the severity of injuries from small arms fire when compared to the M-69. Anecdotally, it provides roughly level IIIA ballistic protection, not accounting for blunt force injuries, stopping rounds as powerful as a .44 magnum from a handgun[2] in certain test methodologies, while being penetrated by 9mm FMJ in others[3]. Despite this, the vest was only ever designed or intended to stop small fragments without injury to the user; NIJ class 1 protection might be a more accurate assessment, were back-face deformation measured. The PASGT Vest weighed approximately 9 pounds, a small increase over the previous model.
In order to provide protection against high velocity bullets, the PASGT Vest was, in 1996, combined with the Interim Small Arms Protective Overvest (ISAPO) pending adoption of Interceptor body armor. The ISAPO weighed about 16.5 pounds and consisted of a carrier to hold two protective ceramic plate inserts. A PASGT armor system with overvest weighed more than 25 pounds and was criticized by many US troops as unacceptably cumbersome in combat. The ballistic fill consists of 13 plies of 14 oz. water repellent treated Aramid (Kevlar 29) fabric. The inner and outer cover, shoulder pads and front closure flap of the vest are water repellent treated 8 oz. ballistic nylon cloth. While phased out as frontline body armor by the time of the 2003 Iraq War, some Army units would use old PASGT Vests as makeshift armor for their vehicles in the absence of purpose-made up-armor kits.
Users
Armies
- Greek Army
- Argentine Army & Marines
- Australian Army
- Georgian Army
- Belgian Land Component
- Colombian National Army
- Afghan National Army
- Brazilian Army
- Egyptian Army
- Estonian Defence Forces
- New Zealand Army
- Philippine Army
- Philippine Marine Corps
- Romanian Armed Forces
- Singapore Army
- Sri Lanka Army
- Malaysian Army
- Mexican Army
- Iraqi Army
- Royal Cambodian Army
- Royal Thai Army
- Portuguese Army
- Saudi Arabian Army
- Republic of Korea Army
- Army of Venezuela
- Honduran Army
Law Enforcement
- Greek Police EKAM
- Emergency Response Team (RCMP)
- Emergency Task Force
- Mexican Federal Police
- United States Mint Police
- Pasukan Gerakan Khas
- Trup Tindakan Cepat
- State Protection Group
- Specialist Response and Security
- Special Tasks and Rescue
- Malaysian Special Task And Rescue
- Tactical Assault Group
- Drug Enforcement Administration
- Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
- Los Angeles Police Department SWAT
- Oklahoma City Police Department SWAT
- New York Police Department ESU
- HKPF (Special Duties Unit, Police Tactical Unit (Hong Kong) and Airport Security Unit (Hong Kong)) - uses PASGT variant AC-100 helmet
Others
- media outlets reporting in the field in Afghanistan and Iraq
Variants
Variant Name | Origins | Used by |
---|---|---|
SPECTRA helmet | France | used by the Danish Army, French Army and Canadian Forces |
Lightweight Helmet | United States | used by the United States Marine Corps |
MICH TC-2000 Combat Helmet | United States | used by the United States Army |
JK 96a Light Steel Helmet and JK 96b Light Steel Helmet | People's Republic of China | Chinese copy of the PASGT used by People's Liberation Army |
C-1 Kevlar Helmet | used by Singapore Armed Forces | |
AC-100 helmet | United Kingdom | made for SAS and HKPF |
VestGuard (Kevlar and M88 version) | United Kingdom | |
OE TECH TACTICAL | People's Republic of China | replica only |
NDH 2001 and 2006 | People's Republic of China | Norinco produces two types of PASGT type helmets targeting police |
See also
- Body armor
- Kevlar
- M1 Helmet - formerly used by the United States Army, Canadian Forces
- GK 80a Helmet - People's Republic of China
- GK 80/A1 Helmet - People's Republic of China
- Interceptor body armor
- Mk. 6 Helmet - United Kingdom
References
External links
- fas.org - PASGT Vest
- Olive-Drab.com - PASGT Vest
- Globalsecurity.org - Personnel Armor System for Ground Troops Helmet
- Olive-Drab.com - Personnel Armor System Ground Troops (PASGT) Kevlar Helmet
- PASGT helmet
- MICH helmet
- PASGT Helmet Operator's Manual
- PASGT Helmet Use and Care Manual
- The Box o' Truth tests the PASGT helmet against common rounds